173 So. 392 | Ala. | 1937
The gravamen of the plaintiff's complaint is that "defendantnegligently bottled or allowed to remain in said bottle when said coca cola was bottled, a coca cola cap or other foreign matter" which rendered the coca cola unfit for human consumption. (Italics supplied.) Birmingham Chero-Cola Bottling Co. v. Clark,
Defendant's special charge, made the basis of assignment of error 1, states a sound proposition of law as applied to the case as presented on the evidence, and might well have been given. However, the oral charge of the court fully covered this proposition and the refusal of the charge was not error which justifies a reversal of the judgment. Code 1923, § 9509; Nickerson v. State,
The other special charges upon which assignments of error 2, 3, and 4 are grounded, if they had been given, would have invaded the province of the jury, in that they each assume that the facts hypothesized constituted negligence on the part of the plaintiff proximately contributing to his hurt.
In Birmingham Nat. Bank v. Bradley,
This rule has since been consistently adhered to. Birmingham Baptist Hospital, Inc., v. Blackwell,
The conduct of plaintiff's counsel during the cross-examination of defendant's witnesses Dumas and Bridges, the predicate for grounds 1, (a), (b), (c), (d), and (e) of the motion for a new trial, was within the rule of these cases, and the question was properly raised by defendant's objection and motion for mistrial, and was renewed in the motion for a new trial.
The judgment here is that the court erred in overruling the defendant's motion for a new trial. For this error, let the judgment be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and KNIGHT, JJ., concur. *46